Anonymous ID: f29fd6 June 3, 2019, 3:15 p.m. No.6664220   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4279 >>4288

repost

 

HOW ABOUT WE PLAY A GAME?

 

I knew i remeberd that name

 

KEVIN POULSEN

 

Not too many people have there own unsolved mysteries segment

 

starts at 11:48

 

https://youtu.be/WNXJhUD00iM

 

https://unsolved.com/gallery/kevin-poulsen/

 

https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/man-doxxed-by-daily-beast-over-fake-drunk-pelosi-video-planning-to-sue

Anonymous ID: f29fd6 June 3, 2019, 3:25 p.m. No.6664279   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4288 >>4420

>>6664220

 

“We found a storage locker that contained pieces of electronic equipment, pay phones, and computer printouts, including a printout of the unpublished number of the

 

Soviet embassy in San Francisco

 

That’s not the type of equipment or material that one would buy at a swap meet or find in a dumpster. It was quite obviously stolen property.”

 

The storage unit had been rented to Kevin Poulsen, who was now 21-years-old. When Von Brauch and police searched his apartment, they found a wiretapping facility in a spare bedroom:

 

“The equipment in the switch room allowed Mr. Poulsen not only to enter computer databases… it also gave him the ability to monitor telephone conversations without parties to the conversation being aware that they were being monitored.”

 

Kevin was captured in Los Angeles

 

Connected to Poulsen’s computer was an unauthorized “test set,” which could be used to tap into private phone lines. Only the telephone company and law enforcement officials are allowed to use “test sets.” But the smoking gun was a series of photographs Poulsen had taken of himself breaking into a telephone switching trailer, then using the equipment inside. Kevin’s ego provided the phone company with the evidence they needed to bring in Special Agent William Smith of the FBI:

 

“We determined that the acts Poulsen was involved in had escalated. We found evidence that Poulsen had penetrated the United States government computer and had transferred the passwords of that computer via electronic mail to other individuals.”

 

Investigators found out that someone matching Poulsen’s description had illegally entered several Northern California telephone facilities using a false ID. Once inside, the intruder found telephone numbers he could use to hack into the telephone company’s computer system. He also had stolen manuals, switching equipment, and a test set like the one found in Poulsen’s apartment. Using the stolen equipment, Poulsen had allegedly infiltrated U.S. military computer transmissions to obtain classified Army information. The FBI suspected that Poulsen might have been engaging in espionage. On October 19, 1989, a two-year investigation resulted in a 19-count indictment against Kevin Poulsen and two fellow hackers. They were charged with conspiracy, computer fraud, wiretapping, embezzlement, and theft of public property and records. The two other men were arrested but Poulsen disappeared.

 

Update:

 

Shortly after this story aired, the FBI received information that Kevin Poulsen was living near Los Angeles. Special Agent Terry Atchley of the FBI was called to stake out a Hughes Market in Van Nuys, where Poulsen was reportedly last seen:

 

“At about 10 minutes to midnight, Kevin Poulsen arrived, drove up and parked immediately in front of the market. Once Kevin was in the store, I took a position near the front door and asked the security guard to go find the evening manager so I could tell him that Kevin Poulsen was in the store.”

 

As Poulsen was checking out and about to leave the store, he was tackled by two employees. A security guard escorted him to a storeroom where he was held until FBI agents arrived and placed him under arrest. Kevin Poulsen pleaded guilty to seven counts of mail, wire and computer fraud, money laundering, and obstruction of justice. He was sentenced to 51 months in prison and ordered to pay $56,000 in restitution. When Poulsen was released from prison, he was also given five years probation.

 

After prison, Kevin Poulsen re-invented himself as a journalist and put his criminal past behind him. He wrote a computer script capable of searching the membership of Myspace for sex offenders. He ultimately confirmed the identities of 744 sex offenders with Myspace profiles.

 

https://unsolved.com/gallery/kevin-poulsen/